The New Zealand Herald

$150k Rowe Cup shapes as classic

Youngsters will need more than sheer ability

- Michael Guerin

The men who have been there, done that suggest the best run as much as the best horse will win tomorrow night’s $150,000 Rowe Cup at Alexandra Park.

And while the TAB market says the young gun four-year-olds have the wood on their rivals the race is shaping as one of the most even group ones at Alexandra Park in years.

Last Friday’s Anzac Cup winner Sundees Son shares the $4 favouritis­m with fellow 4-year-old Majestic Man as bookmakers signal what they see as a changing of the guard in the open class trotting ranks.

But Majestic Man’s trainer Phil Williamson says while he couldn’t be happier going into the race the youngsters will need more than sheer ability on their side.

“It is a very good race and there are plenty of winning chances,” says Williamson, one of only two trainers in the race to have won both the Rowe Cup and the Dominion, New Zealand’s two marquee trotting races.

“I think a lot of it will come down to the run and the horse who has the

luck. “This field is that even and at this level luck is crucial. I think Majestic Man will handle barrier one and if he steps away and can trail or be three back on the markers I’ll be happy.

“But as good as both him and Sundees Son were last week they can’t just expect to beat these older horses with speed because 3200m is a different type of race.

“So yes we can win but it won’t be easy. These races never are.”

That opinion is shared by Paul Nairn, the only other trainer in the race who has won both the Rowe and the Dominion. He has Ronald J and Habibi Inta in the Rowe and thinks both can get closer than their fifth and sixths in the Anzac Cup.

“Both of them had a bit of bad luck last week, Ronald J got held up a bit and Habibi Inta was hitting the stays on his sulky, which we will fix for this week.

“But they are only two of about six or eight chances in the race.

“One of the big things in these races is having a horse who can get away good from the standing start and get to the marker pegs because that is a huge help.

“Over the 3200m it can be very hard to win if you are covering extra ground in the running line.”

That would appear to be the problem for horses like defending champion Speeding Spur and Sundees Son, both of whom have to give away starts from the second line and will therefore almost certainly be three wide at some stage.

That didn’t bother Sundees Son over 2200m last Friday and he may be so brilliant and in the zone he can still win but he did gallop shortly after the line last Friday so is still very much a take-on-trust horse at the early stage of his open class career.

While the Rowe Cup has a huge array of winning hopes the $100,000 Trotting Derby looks to have two and once against Nairn should be to the fore with Lotamuscle.

He was nearly 20-1 when he beat Enhance Your Calm in the NZ Trot Derby last month but is only $2.90 to repeat that as he appears to be a happy horse while Enhance Your Calm bungled his Alexandra Park debut becoming unbalanced and galloping early.

The best version of Enhance Your Calm may be too fast for Lotamuscle but even if the favourite can lead it looks like Lotamuscle could be sitting on his back in the trail and that could make for an uncomforta­ble watch for Enhance Your Calm’s backers.

Turn It Up ($1.65) has again opened favourite in the $100,000 Messenger over stablemate Spankem ($3.60) even though the latter used his better barrier draw to win last Friday’s Taylor Mile and has that advantage again.

 ?? Photo / Trish Dunell ?? Sundees Son shares $4 favouritis­m for the Rowe Cup tomorrow night.
Photo / Trish Dunell Sundees Son shares $4 favouritis­m for the Rowe Cup tomorrow night.
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